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Bargery Number 175
Music Notation
Music (Given or Suggested) A tune has been found but awaits notation See [Note 1]
Printer or Publisher
Author C. Horne
Composer
Performer
Earliest Date 1880
Evidence for Earliest Date Date given on the broadside
Latest Date 1880
Evidence for Latest Date Publication date
Source of Text Nat. Lib. of Scotland shelfmark APS.3.81.9
Where Printed Aberdeen
Roud 21586
Parsed Title Tay Bridge Disaster, In memory of
First Line The Bridge, the bridge, the wondrous bridge
Source of Music See [Note 1]
Variant Set
Comments on Song
Source Title In Memory of the Tay Bridge Disaster
Other Imprints
Related Songs ns008

Tay Bridge Disaster, In Memory of the

 175Headblock.png

The bridge was blown down, with the last train from the south, on Sunday evening, the 28th day of December, 1879, when it was supposed that over sixty lives were lost, and none were left to tell the tale. There are now Forty-six bodies recovered, two of which are women, and one a girl, and all identified. 15th May 1880  [Note 175.1]

 [175Notation]

The Bridge, the Bridge, the wondrous Bridge
That spans the Firth of Tay,
The greatest work of human skill,
The wonder of the day.

Its lofty pillars stood erect,
And bore its girders high,
A noble sight, when underneath
Great ships were sailing by.

A wonder to the world it stood,
The glory of Dundee ;
An iron bridge, so firmly built,
Across the raging sea.

But what's the strength of bolt and bar ?
And what's the skill of man,
Compared with nature's blast that blow,
Produced by nature's fan ?

Though large and strong the beams may be,
That stretch across the spans,
Let but the tempest breathe its breath,
And iron yields like wands. [Note 175.2]

'Twas Sabbath eve, the train had left
Old Scotland's chiefest town,
Where stands the ancient Holyrood,
A palace of renown.

From stage to stage the train speeds on,
And quickly wends its way
Through hill and dale and country town,
Bound for the Banks of Tay.

Its living freight of young and old,
It gathered by the way ;
And some were fearful, some were bold,
And some were glad and gay.

Some sad at heart their way direct,
The sick to tend and cheer ;
While others with their friends expect
To spend a glad New-Year.

A father with his children sits,
The youngest in his arm,
The smile of joy upon his lips, 
He never thinks of harm.

A youth, in manhood's prime, is seen :
A maid sits by his side-
The object of his love so keen-
 About to be his bride.

The train speeds on its fatal course
And nears the spot of doom   
The bridge is seen, while passing clouds
Unvail the pale-faced moon.

Amidst the tempest loud and shrill,
The train it did proceed;
When, ah ! no human hand or skill,
Could stay the fatal deed.

The train into the girders came
And loud the wind did roar;
A flash is seen-the Bridge is broke-
The train is heard no more.

"The Bridge is down, "the Bridge is down,"
in words of terror spread ;
The train is gone, its living freight
Are numbered with the dead

'Tis sad to see the open gap
At morrow's light of day ;
But sadder, still, to think of those
That perished in the Tay.  

Ah ! what's our life-a thread-a breath-
That's easy snatch'd away ;
In midst of life we are in death,
Is taught us day by day

Dry up your tears, ye friends the
And lean upon the Lord ;
The widow's stay, the orphan's friend,
Are promised in His word.

By C. HORNE, Author of the "Aberdeen Ferry Boat Calamity," "Childhood's Days," "To an Aged Mother," "Fishing Boats' Disaster," &c.
Sold at 124 Gallowgate, and 26 Craigie Street, Aberdeen. 15th May, 1880

 

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Lamentable Lines on the Tay Bridge...

bar210: Dates ----~1880|

First line "Unto my sad heart rending tale" features the usual motifs but gives no substantial detail of the event. It wildly overestimates the numbers killed, stating...

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bar427: Dates ----~----|

From Farewell to steam by Don Bilston. The song gives the details of the train and names David Mitchell of Dundee as the driver. The song describes...

Tay Bridge Disaster, In Memory of the

bar175: Dates 1880~1880|

First line "The Bridge, the Bridge, the wondrous Bridge" seems to be the text on which bar659 is based. It starts by admiring the engineering of the...

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bar428: Dates 1880~1879|

First line "Beautiful Railway Bridge of the Silv'ry Tay!" Is the only piece that acknowledges the finding of the enquiry.  McGonnagall overestimates the number of lives lost....

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bar429: Dates 1879~1880|

First line "In this gay and festive season," emphasises that the disaster happened during the Christmas season. It also gives some technical detail about the causes of...

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bar420: Dates ----~----|

A children's game song. 

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bar659: Dates 1880~----|

First line "Ye'll all have ye heard about the brig that spanned the river Tay" is a version of 175 ~ In Memory of the Tay Bridge...

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bar660: Dates 1880~----|

First line "You people of Scotland I pray give attention" lists 23 victims by name and identifies a further 8 by their relationship to a named victim....

Tay Bridge Disaster (661)

bar661: Dates 1879~1880|

First line "The wintry wind blew loud and chill", was printed in the Dundee Courier of 6th January 1880 [Ref: British Newspaper Archive]. The poem was written...

The Tay Bridge disaster 1879

ns008: Dates ----~----|

The disaster has been well documented and the story will not detain us here. The salient points to bear in mind when looking at the songs and...

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